4.8 Article

Congener-specific dechlorination of dissolved PCBs by microscale and nanoscale zerovalent iron in a water/methanol solution

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 38, Issue 19, Pages 5208-5216

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/es049835q

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Polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB)-contaminated sediments remain a significant threat to humans and aquatic ecosystems. Dredging and disposal is costly, so viable in situ technologies to dechlorinate PCBs are needed. This study demonstrates that nanoscale zerovalent iron (ZVI) dechlorinates PCBs to lower-chlorinated products under ambient conditions, provides insight into structure-activity relationships between PCB isomers, and compares the reactivity of nanoscale ZVI to that of palladized microscale ZVI. Six PCB congeners were studied (22', 34', 234, 22'35', 22'45', and 33'44') to compare the initial rate of dechlorination of each and to monitor the order in which chlorines are removed. Using 200 g/L of nanoscale ZVI in a 30% MeOH/water mixture, observed surface-area normalized pseudo-first-order PCB dechlorination rate constants ranged from 1 x 10(-6) to 5.5 x 10(-4) L yr(-1) m(-2) depending on the PCB congener tested. Using 200 g/L of palladized (0.05 wt %) microscale ZVI, surface-area normalized pseudo-first-order PCB dechlorination rate constants were significantly faster and ranged from 3.8 x 10(-2) to 1.7 x 10(-1) L yr(-1) m(-2), but these rates were not sustainable. For nanoscale ZVI, nonorthosubstituted congeners had faster initial dechlorination rates than orthosubstituted congeners in the same homologue group. Chlorines in the para and meta position were predominantly removed over chlorines in the ortho position, which suggests that more-toxic coplanar PCB congeners are not likely to form from less-toxic noncoplanar, orthosubstituted congeners. Complete dechlorination was not observed over the course of the experiments. PCB dechlorination is rapid enough that nanoscale ZVI may offer novel in situ remedial alternatives for PCB-contaminated sediments.

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